Time as a Luxury for the Home: Jaeger-LeCoultre Atmos Clocks

Your home is already beautiful, but for those looking to give it a real edge, consider the role time plays in it. You look at the clock when you get up in the morning, get ready for work, put the kids to bed at night and so much more than you realize.

The following is a guest post Roberta Naas, founder of ATimelyPerspective.com

Your home is already beautiful, but for those looking to give it a real edge, consider the role time plays in it. You look at the clock when you get up in the morning, get ready for work, put the kids to bed at night and so much more than you realize.

While a clock is not a necessary item in today’s digital world, it is a functional piece of art and décor – especially when selected wisely. For centuries, people’s homes have been measured as standards of elegance and stature based on the clocks that resided therein. From table clocks to grandfather clocks and eventually wall clocks, time is a statement in taste as well as punctuality.

One superb statement maker today is the Atmos Clock from Jaeger-LeCoultre. Back in 1928, the Atmos clock was first introduced to the market as a revolutionary timepiece. The concept behind it – the clock could run without needing to be set or managed after its initial setting thanks to the fact that it is regulated by minuscule changes in temperature. Developed by engineer Jean-Leon Reutter, the Atmos clock and was immediately embraced by the luxury watch brand Jaeger-LeCoutlre, which purchased the design and made what is now an iconic collection.

Today, the Atmos clock essentially works on the same principal. Some say it runs on air, but the reality is that the mechanism is driven by tiny successive changes in temperature thanks to a hermetically sealed capsule that holds a gaseous mixture that dilates when the temperature rises and contracts when it cools. The capsule, working in tandem with the clock’s mainspring, winds the barrel with each atmosphere change. Just a single degree temperature change will power the clock for 48 hours.

So coveted is the Atmos – an environmentally friendly clock—that it has been gifted to US presidents and global diplomats such as President John F. Kennedy, Sir Winston Churchill, General Charles De Gaulle, President Ronald Reagan, Pope John Paul II, King Hussein of Jordan by Jaeger-LeCoutre.

Jaeger-LeCoultre continues to offer an array of Atmos clock styles for any taste and décor.   Designs include looks that are reminiscent of models built in the 1940’s to high-end marquetry clocks and even Mystery clocks with hidden mechanisms.  The clocks range in price from $6,900 to $30,000 and higher.

Among the new clocks from Jaeger-LeCoultre are two stand outs. One is a new Marqueterie Clock housed in a hand-made cabinet made to honor German artist Gustav Klimt’s work, “The Waiting,” the other is a new clock made in collaboration with Hermes and glassmaker Les Cristalleries de Saint-Louis. This is a round, 22-pound globe of open-worked hand-blown glass designed to resemble bubbles. Sold only through Hermes or Jaeger-LeCoultre boutiques, the Hermes Atmos clock by Jaeger-LeCoultre is created in a limited edition.

What you spend on a clock for your home is definitely dictated by your budget, but there are a host of great clocks on the market suitable for any budget. The keys to clock shopping:

  • Pick what you like and what makes a personal statement about you.
  • While table clocks and mantle clocks are beautiful ornamental art, they typically take up space and are not necessarily strategically placed for guests to view the time. Consider augmenting with a wall clock.
  • Wall clocks should mirror your design sense in color, motif or architectural style
  • Invest in time wisely for your home and others will recognize your taste.

 

Roberta Naas is a 30 year veteran watch industry journalist author of five books and founder of top industry authoritative watch site called atimelyperspective.com.  With a Master of Arts degree in newspaper journalism from the Newhouse School, Syracuse University, and as a member of Sigma Delta Chi, the Society of Professional Journalists, Naas brings responsible, factual – yet always timely and insightful — reporting of the watch industry to the forefront.

David Marine
David Marine

Husband. Father. Socializer. Mets Lifer. TV Aficionado. Consumer Engager. David Marine is the Chief Marketing Officer at Coldwell Banker, where he oversees the brand’s marketing efforts and content strategy including acting as managing editor for the Coldwell Banker blog and heading up video production efforts. While CMO by day, David runs a three ring circus at night as he is the father of 4 boys. He also happens to be married to Wonder Woman. True story.

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